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China builds 'xiaokang border defence village' in Arunachal: Implications for India's security

India watches as China 'accelerates' construction along border with Bhutan
January. 13 2022


China speeded up construction in 2021, according to new satellite images and experts, erecting more than 200 structures in six areas along the disputed frontiers with Bhutan, a tiny Himalayan country and Indian ally.
The new imagery suggests that neither India nor Bhutan has responded on the ground to China's construction activities, experts say.'s construction activities, experts say.

The new imagery suggests that neither India nor Bhutan has responded on the ground to China's construction activities, experts say. (TRTWorld)

China has reportedly accelerated settlement-building along its disputed border with Bhutan, with more than 200 structures, including two-storey buildings, under construction in six locations, according to satellite image analysis.

The images and analysis supplied to Reuters news agency by US data analytics firm HawkEye 360, which uses satellites to gather intelligence on ground-level activities, and vetted by two other experts, provide a detailed look into China's recent construction along its frontier with Bhutan.

Construction-related activity in some of the locations along Bhutan's western border has been under way since early 2020, with China initially building tracks and clearing out areas, based on material provided by satellite imagery firms Capella Space and Planet Labs, said Chris Biggers, the mission applications director at HawkEye 360.

Images show the work speeded up in 2021. Smaller structures were erected –– possibly to house equipment and supplies ––followed by the laying of foundations and then the construction of buildings, Biggers said.

"To me, 2021 was the period for acceleration," Biggers said.

Two other experts who studied the locations of the new construction and recent satellite images taken by Capella Space said all six settlements appear to be in territory disputed by China and Bhutan –– including a contested tract of roughly 110 square kilometres –– with little in the way of resources or native population.

Bhutan won't discuss border issues in public
"It is Bhutan's policy not to talk about boundary issues in the public," Bhutan's Foreign Ministry said in response to questions.
The ministry declined to comment further.

The construction suggests that China is bent on resolving its border claims by giving its ambitions concrete form, said the experts and one Indian defence source.
China's Foreign Ministry said the construction is "entirely for the improvement of the working and living conditions of the local people."

"It is within China's sovereignty to carry out normal construction activities on its own territory," the ministry said.
The ministry declined to comment further.
Bhutan, a country of less than 800,000 people, has been negotiating with Beijing for almost four decades to settle their 477-km border.
Bhutan, a country of less than 800,000 people, has been negotiating with Beijing for almost four decades to settle their 477-km border. (Reuters)

Over four decades of dispute
The villages also offer Beijing some strategic value, two of the experts said. The new construction is 9 to 27km from the Doklam area at the junction of the borders of India, Bhutan and China, where Indian and Chinese troops were locked in standoff for more than two months in 2017.

The settlements would allow China to better control and monitor far-flung areas, and potentially use them to establish security-focused installations, according to one expert and the Indian defence source.

India's Foreign Ministry did not respond to a request for comment.

Bhutan, a country of less than 800,000 people, has been negotiating with Beijing for almost four decades to settle their 477-km border. At issue for Bhutan is not just territorial integrity, but also concerns over the potential security implications for India, which is the Himalayan kingdom's main ally and economic partner.

The Bhutanese Foreign Ministry said Bhutan and China had agreed during the latest round of boundary negotiations in April 2021 to speed up the process of resolving their differences. It declined to discuss the details of the plan to do so.

"All issues are discussed between Bhutan and China within the framework of the Boundary Talks," the ministry said.

"China's village building across the claimed Bhutan border appears to be designed to force Bhutan to yield to Chinese demands in their border negotiations, now in their 24th round after 37 years," said Robert Barnett, a professorial research associate at SOAS University of London, who is an expert on Tibet and has studied the China-Bhutan border closely.

Subsidies to settle in border villages
The settlements appear part of a plan Beijing made public in 2017 to build more than 600 villages in border areas in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), which lies on the Chinese side of the disputed border, said Barnett and M. Taylor Fravel, director of the Security Studies Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Fravel said the construction indicated China likely wanted to consolidate its control and improve infrastructure in border areas.

The Chinese-controlled TAR was established in 1965, six years after the Dalai Lama fled Tibet in the wake of a failed uprising against Chinese rule.

Some of the villages near the border are built where there has been no previous construction. China's government gives residents subsidies to settle there, Barnett said.
"All the cross-border villages in the western Bhutan sector are sited in areas where no natural village would be found, since these areas are barely habitable," he said.
Control over the area could give Beijing access to

Control over the area could give Beijing access to "Chicken's Neck" – a narrow, essential strip of land connecting India's northeastern provinces with the rest of the country. (TRTWorld)

Controlling 'Chicken's Neck'
Control over the remote Doklam plateau would potentially give China greater access to the adjoining "Chicken's Neck" area, a strategic strip of land that connects India to its northeastern region.

India shares an unsettled 3,500-km border with China.

Troops from both countries remain deployed near each other in a separate border dispute in the Ladakh region –– about 1,100km from Doklam –– where they clashed in hand-to-hand combat in 2020.

India has been closely monitoring Chinese construction along its borders, the Indian defence source said, declining to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter.
The satellite imagery suggests that neither India nor Bhutan has responded on the ground to China's construction activities, Biggers said.

Nathan Ruser, a researcher at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute research organisation, added that it would be a challenge for India and Bhutan to counter the Chinese construction.

"Any action taken against these Chinese installations would necessarily put civilian populations at risk," Ruser said.
"It limits the ways in which India and Bhutan are able to combat Chinese encroachment into disputed territories."


Low caste Indians would lynch to live in there.
 

Primary school and kingdergarten of the China-India new border village​

China built many new border villages along the Chinese Indian border in recent years and relocated many villagers into those newly built border villages, a visitor visits a primary school and a kingdergarten in one such village.

 
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"Xiao Kang" villages all along the Chinese Indian border

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I really hate wasting money in these places, these people can cross the border and go to India to be Indians if they don't want to be Chinese.
 
Tibet is not blessed with agreeable environmemt, barren, frigid high altitude mountain lands with very thin air make it extreme hard for anything to grow, this is the reason why for thousands of years locals had to live a harsh and dirt poor, hand to mouth style of life.

In the very southern Tibet, the region bordering India, the altitude is much lower than the rest of Tibet, terrains and weather are much nicer and friendly, low lying fertile lands with tropical climate, water is in great abundance and even tropical fruits like bananas vastly grow.

In recent years, Chinese government moved lots of local Tibetans from high altitude mountain top regions down to the south next to the Indian border, the government provides everything from housing to education, from hospitals to jobs, the life has been greatly improved for the locals and new border settlements also help the government to guard the border between China and India.

A visitor is amazed by a small village, 巴吉 village, in Nyingchi county in South Tibet, it's a relocation village where every house is big and beautiful, every family has fancy cars, he intends to rent one house and inquires about the rent, it's 200,000 Yuan per year( 30,000 USD), he feels it's too expensive for him and he scraps that idea.


Nyingchi county
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How locals spend their nights in newly built border village sitting right on the Chinese-Indian border, these newly government built border villages are designed to populate the empty border regions so the long borders could be guarded by local civlians, this will take some pressure off Chinese PLA border patrol troops guarding such a long border, villagers get "border residence bonus" ,6,600 Yuan (1,000$) per person/year.
Indian authorities claim that those villages were built deep inside India's territory but China insists they are inside China.

Mama New Village is located in the valley of the Lebugou in the southern foothills of the Himalayas and the Sino-Indian border area.
The climate of this area is affected by the warm and humid air flow of the Indian Ocean. The climate is humid throughout the year and the rainy season is long. The Mama Village Committee is located at the seat of the government of Mama Township, Cuona County, far from the city of Cuona County.
The traffic roads are all asphalt roads.

How local villagers spend their nights in newly built Mama village on the border
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The site of the PLA frontline command post of the 1962 China-India border war next to the Mama village

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How people live kilometers away on the Indian side of the border, people living on both sides are the same ethnicity, The Mishmi or Deng people. They some times bump into each other in the mountains and can talk to each other in their own language.

 
How people live kilometers away on the Indian side of the border, people living on both sides are the same ethnicity, The Mishmi or Deng people. They some times bump into each other in the mountains and can talk to each other in their own language.

I think communication between minorities on the boarder should be encouraged. So they can see what their life should be if the Indian government was actually competent.
 
I really hate wasting money in these places, these people can cross the border and go to India to be Indians if they don't want to be Chinese.
Are you worried about competition with India? These locals are precious. Their allegiance directly affects border disputes.
 
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